Enron was told strategy in Calif. could be illegal   Dec. 12, 2002, 4:40PM
                                  By HARVEY RICE                                  Copyright 2002 Houston Chronicle
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                                  SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- Despite a warning the practices could be                                 considered criminal, Enron energy traders may have kept using                                 strategies to manipulate the electricity market during California's                                 energy crisis, according to interviews and documents. 
                                  An Oct. 30, 2000, memo written by an outside law firm detailed                                 the charges Enron and its employees could face. One was wire                                 fraud, a charge that  Timothy Belden, former chief trader for Enron                                 Power Marketing in Portland, Ore., pleaded guilty to in October.                                 He is now cooperating with prosecutors. 
                                  "If Enron is found to have engaged in deceptive or fraudulent                                 practices, there is also the risk of other criminal legal theories                                 such as wire fraud, RICO (racketeering statute), fraud involving                                 markets and fictitious commodity transactions," the memo reads                                 in part. "In addition, depending upon the conduct, there may be                                 the potential for criminal charges prosecuted against both                                 individuals and the company." 
                                  The memo and other documents from federal regulatory                                 proceedings cast some light on the federal grand jury investigation                                 in San Francisco that snared Belden. 
                                  "It's clear that these same documents are in the hands of both                                 federal and state investigators," said a source familiar with the                                 documents. 
                                  The eight-page memo by Gary Fergus and Peter Meringolo,                                 lawyers who then worked for Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison in San                                 Francisco, was written after the California Public Utility                                 Commission obtained subpoenas for Enron documents and the                                 state's attorney general publicly threatened to prosecute Enron                                 officials. 
                                  About a month before the memo was written, Belden had briefed                                 Fergus and other Enron attorneys on Enron's trading tactics, the                                 documents show. 
                                  On Nov. 4, a team of attorneys again huddled with Belden, Jeffrey                                 Richter, then head of the short-term trading desk, and John                                 Forney, then head of the real-time trading desk, according to the                                 documents. 
                                  The traders told the lawyers of the strategies they were using to                                 exploit anomalies in California's regulatory regime. The following                                 month, the lawyers then wrote a memo outlining those strategies,                                 which were given catchy names, such as Death Star, Fat Boy and                                 Get Shorty. 
                                  That memo, by Enron attorney Christian Yoder and then-outside                                 attorney Stephen Hall, whom Enron later hired, was released                                 voluntarily by Enron to the Federal Energy Regulatory                                 Commission, which made it public by putting it on its Web site. It                                 was the chief reason the federal grand jury was impaneled in                                 June. 
                                  "According to the lawyers, once the memo was written, the traders                                 were instructed not to use the strategies," said Christian                                 Schreiber, investigator for the California Senate committee                                 investigating market abuse during the energy crisis. "We believe it                                 continued." 
                                  He said an analysis of power trades has shown that the strategies                                 were used until the FERC imposed a price cap on energy sales in                                 June 2001 -- at least six months after traders were supposedly                                 told to stop using them. 
                                  And Belden, when he entered his plea, stated that the practices                                 were used in 2001. 
                                  Robert McCullough, managing partner of McCullough Research,                                 said his analysis shows that Enron traders continued to use some                                 of the strategies into 2001, but were forced to discontinue others                                 because of the changes in the way regulators scheduled power                                 transmissions. 
                                  "Fat Boy probably lasted to the bitter end," McCullough said. In that maneuver, traders                                 would schedule more power for transmission the next day than its customers would                                 need, then sell the unused power at favorable rates when demand exceeded supply. 
                                  Erik Saltmarsh, acting executive director of the state Electricity Oversight Board, said his                                 staff's analysis of electricity movement in 2001 also indicated that Enron continued to                                 use the practices long after the warning memo was written. 
                                  An Enron spokeswoman declined comment. She said the company was cooperating with                                 all investigations. 
                                  Richard Sanders, then Enron's assistant general counsel, testified to Congress that he                                 ordered a halt to the practices after he learned about them. Sanders and Hall made                                 similar statements in depositions, but said the order was not issued in writing and they                                 never verified whether traders had heeded their advice. 
                                  A source familiar with the proceedings challenged those assertions: "It made no sense                                 that they would not have issued an order like that in writing." 
                                  Schreiber said the memo outlining the possible criminal charges was sent to Enron                                 executives. "It was probably seen by the general counsel and probably some of the Enron                                 board members," Schreiber said. 
                                  Neil Egelston, a Washington attorney who represents several former board members, said                                 the board was not shown the Oct. 30, 2000, memo. 
                                  "To the contrary, the board was informed by Enron management at several meetings that                                 Enron's conduct in California was proper," Egelston said. 
                                  Some attorneys believe the FERC documents indicate where the federal grand jury                                 investigation is headed. 
                                  Federal investigators have been mining information from the FERC and California                                 agencies, which allege that Enron wasn't the only company to manipulate state energy                                 markets. 
                                  If the federal investigation follows the path used by other investigations, prosecutors will                                 be seeking testimony from Enron employees who worked with Belden and from traders                                 at other energy companies who are alleged to have used the same questionable                                 strategies. 
                                  At an October news conference to announce Belden's guilty plea, Kevin Ryan, U.S.                                 attorney for the Northern District of California, said he hoped to use Belden "as a window                                 into upper levels of Enron management." 
                                  Belden's former boss, John Lavorato, then president and chief executive of Enron                                 Americas, is cooperating with federal investigators but has not yet been asked to testify                                 before the grand jury, a source close to Lavorato said. 
                                  Lavorato reported to then-general counsel for trading Greg Whalley, who has been                                 questioned by FERC investigators. Whalley reported to Mark Frevert, then a senior                                 executive at Enron, who reported to then-Chief Executive Officer Jeff Skilling. 
                                  Enron officials told Congress that Skilling was not notified of the questionable trading                                 strategies until June 2001. 
                                  Investigators also are interested in Forney and Richter because their trading desks used                                 the questionable trading strategies, documents show. Forney acknowledged in a FERC                                 proceeding that he also is cooperating with federal investigators. 
                                  FERC documents show that Forney devised a gaming strategy named "Forney's perpetual                                 loop," which allowed Enron to get paid for power it never moved. 
                                  Richter, a math teacher at Humble High School before joining Enron in 1997, took the                                 Fifth Amendment in response to nearly every question in his deposition. 
                                  Attorneys for Forney and Richter could not be reached for comment. 
                                  Court documents indicate that the grand jury investigation will cast a wide net that may                                 drag in other energy companies. In November, the jury issued subpoenas to Dynegy,                                 Southern Co., AES Corp., Duke Energy, Mirant Corp., Reliant Resources and Williams                                 Cos. 
                                  "The jig is up," said Michael Aguirre, a former federal prosecutor now in private practice                                 in San Diego who has filed a taxpayer lawsuit against Enron and other energy                                 companies. 
                                  "Where the government casts its net, the nature of the net, the size of the net and                                 number of the nets indicate that they are now into a major price-fixing case," Aguirre                                 said. "What they started looking at was market manipulation, then, as they got into it,                                 they started to see evidence of collusive price-fixing. 
                                  "This is the most pervasive illegal activity to hit the United States since mob operations in                                 New York," Aguirre said. "It's going to lead to the collapse of power companies." 
                                  A preliminary FERC investigation asked 130 sellers of wholesale electricity to affirm                                 under oath whether they had engaged in improper strategies used by Enron. 
                                  The FERC report also said that the strategies contributed to California's power crisis,                                 even when drought conditions and other factors were considered. 
                                  "These now infamous trading strategies have adversely affected the confidence of markets                                 far beyond their dollar impact on spot prices," the report said. 
                                  Enron earned about $1.8 billion by trading energy in 2000-2001, the FERC said. Exactly                                 how much of that came from improper trading strategies is difficult to determine, the                                 report said. 
                                  The FERC estimated, however, that Enron earned $33 million in fees for power                                 transported along a single line.
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